The 60-Second Overview
Sea Hammock is what the Ponte Vedra oceanfront looked like before the towers: 109 condominiums built as old-Florida beach cottages, tongue-and-groove cedar siding under copper roofs, spread across 24-plus acres of direct ocean frontage east of A1A, just south of Micklers Landing. It was originally marketed as the Old Ponte Vedra Condos, and the association still carries that name, but the address everyone knows is Sea Hammock Way.
The structural facts do most of the selling. This is one of very few gated oceanfront condo communities on the entire Ponte Vedra stretch of A1A, and it is the last developed multi-family beachfront between the Sawgrass corridor and Vilano Beach per local market guides. Plans run two to four bedrooms, roughly 1,381 to 2,400 square feet, every unit gets a one-car garage and storage, and every unit faces either the Atlantic or the Guana preserve across the road.
Recent third-party portal data (dated) shows trades and listings running roughly $1.1M to $1.8M and beyond: preserve-side two-bedrooms around $1.2M, three-bedrooms in the mid-$1Ms, and the largest ocean-row plans pushing past $1.8M. With 109 units and owners who tend to stay, the trickle of listings is thin, and the good ones do not wait.
One hundred nine cottages on the sand, a preserve across the road that can never be developed, and gates at both ends. Sea Hammock's value story was written in the 1980s and zoning finished it.
Fees and the Association: The Real Underwriting
Sea Hammock's fee picture is refreshingly simple by Ponte Vedra standards: one monthly association fee, no CDD, and no club obligation. The association, administered by Marsh Landing Management Company under the Old Ponte Vedra Condos name, collects dues monthly via coupon books, and the funds carry the reserve account, operations, and exterior and community common-area maintenance. Recent listing data describes the fee as also covering common-area insurance, management, trash, water and sewer, pest control, and landscaping; we have not verified a current dollar amount, so confirm the exact fee and the budget behind it with the association before you write anything.
The diligence that matters in 2026 is era-specific. A 1980s-built coastal condominium community falls squarely under Florida's post-Surfside regime: milestone structural inspections, structural integrity reserve studies, and the funding plans behind them. Lenders now read these documents as carefully as buyers should, and the community's inspection status and reserve posture move both financability and price.
The Grounds: Gates, Pool, and the Cabana Clubhouse
Sea Hammock runs on two gated entrances. The north gate carries a keypad call-box that phones the resident and opens with a keypress; the south gate is residents-only by transponder, sized to take moving trucks when both leaves open. Residents get fobs for the clubhouse and pool and up to four transponders per unit, all administered through the management company, which also issues temporary codes for contractors, open houses, and deliveries. It is a genuinely controlled property, not a decorative gate arm.
Inside, the amenity set is deliberately low-key: a large community pool, the Cabana Clubhouse on Sea Hammock Way where the board meets, and private tennis and basketball courts threaded through heavy landscaping. There is no golf, gym, or concierge, and the owners like it that way; the amenity is the 24-plus acres of dune and sand at the end of the boardwalks.
One practical note: boats, trailers, jet skis, and RVs cannot be parked on condominium property per the documents. The one-car garage and storage room with each unit are the storage budget; plan accordingly.
The Condos: Plans, Orientation, and Renovation Math
The architecture is the brand: cedar siding, copper roofing, stucco accents, and stacked-cottage massing that reads as a beach village rather than a condo complex. Plans run from roughly 1,381-square-foot two-bedrooms through 1,614 and 1,705-square-foot mid-plans to the largest layouts around 2,400 square feet with up to four bedrooms, most with extensive decks and many with both east and west balconies.
Orientation is the first price driver: every unit faces either the ocean or the Guana preserve, and the ocean rows command the premium. The second driver is renovation vintage. The bones date to the 1980s, and interiors range from time-capsule to current-magazine; at coastal construction costs, that delta is real money. Price the renovation honestly: a preserve-side project unit plus a serious remodel can land above a turnkey alternative.
What every unit shares is the format that makes the community matter: cottage-scale oceanfront with a garage, in a gated setting that the PV stretch of A1A essentially cannot replicate.
The Guana Edge: The View That Cannot Change
Sea Hammock's western boundary is its quiet superpower. Across A1A sits the Guana corridor of the GTM Research Reserve, tens of thousands of protected acres of lake, marsh, and maritime hammock that will never carry a strip center or a second row of condos. Preserve-side units trade at a discount to the ocean rows, but the view they buy is permanent, and the sunsets over Guana Lake are the community's worst-kept secret.
The location math works the same way to the north: Micklers Landing, the most loved public beach access in Ponte Vedra, is about a mile up A1A, and Nocatee Town Center's groceries, restaurants, and medical are roughly ten minutes west. You live at the quiet end of the boulevard with the conveniences a short drive behind the dune line.
Schools: Resale Fuel Even for Empty-Nesters
Sea Hammock sits in the St. Johns County district, one of Florida's strongest, with third-party guides showing Ocean Palms Elementary, Alice B. Landrum Middle, and Ponte Vedra High serving the community. Many owners here are past the school years, but the zone still matters: it is a meaningful share of why the next buyer pays the premium. Verify current assignments for the specific unit, and remember the private options (Bolles Ponte Vedra campus, Episcopal) are close for that crowd.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
The rhythm is beach-cottage living without the beach-cottage maintenance: coffee on the east deck, the boardwalk before the day heats up, sunset over the preserve from the west balcony. The community is small enough that neighbors and the board are known quantities, and the gates keep the summer beach traffic on the other side of the fence.
The seasonal rhythm
Sea Hammock mixes year-round residents with seasonal owners, and the leasing that happens here runs to multi-month and seasonal terms rather than nightly rentals, which keeps the community feeling residential. Verify the current leasing rules before underwriting any income; they exist to protect exactly this character.
Salt-air ownership
Cedar siding and copper roofs on the oceanfront live in a corrosive environment, and the association maintains the exteriors on real replacement cycles. This is why the reserve study is the document that matters most in your diligence, and why a well-run board here is worth real money.
The Micklers neighbor
Micklers Landing, a mile north, is the public beach access the whole region uses, complete with seasonal traffic on A1A. Inside the gates it barely registers; at the north call-box on a July Saturday, you will notice. Owners learn the south-gate habit fast.
Storm posture
Oceanfront means taking wind and flood seriously: rated glazing or shutters, an elevation-aware insurance package, and an association with a real storm protocol and dune-maintenance history. Ask how the community fared in recent storm seasons; the answers are documented and worth hearing.
Five Costly Mistakes Sea Hammock Buyers Make
Low-rise 1980s oceanfront generates its own specific errors. The five we see:
Buying the deck, skipping the documents
In a 1980s coastal community, the association's reserves, milestone-inspection status, and minutes are the investment. An ocean-row deck with an underfunded reserve account is a discount waiting to be taken, by you or from you.
Mispricing the renovation delta
Original-condition units look like bargains until you price a coastal remodel honestly. Run the all-in number against the turnkey alternative before choosing the project.
Assuming rental income
The documents include leasing requirements, and the market here runs to multi-month terms, not nightly rentals. Verify the current rules in writing before underwriting a dollar of income.
Waiting for the portals
A handful of sales a year means the best ocean-row units often trade to buyers who registered interest early. If you wait for the Zillow alert, you are competing for the leftovers.
Underwriting insurance last
Oceanfront wind and flood quotes vary by unit and by year. Get the real quote, and the association's master-policy picture, inside your inspection window, not at the closing table.
Orientation, Plans, and Where Value Hides
The orientation ladder
Sea Hammock prices climb from the preserve side to the dune line: ocean rows command the premium, preserve rows buy the permanent sunset view at a discount. The inefficiency worth hunting is the well-renovated preserve-side three-bedroom: most of the community's lifestyle, a protected view, and a meaningful discount to the ocean row.
The trap is paying ocean-row money for ocean-row position with original-condition interiors. The Atlantic does not amortize a renovation.
The Sea Hammock Buyer Checklist
- Pull the four association documents: budget, reserve study, milestone-inspection report, and a year of board minutes from Marsh Landing Management.
- Confirm the current monthly fee, exactly what it covers, and any planned or pending special assessments, in writing.
- Verify the leasing rules before underwriting any income: minimum terms, approvals, and recent changes.
- Get the unit-specific insurance quote and the master-policy summary inside your window.
- Price the renovation delta honestly against the turnkey alternative.
- Walk the grounds, not just the unit: siding, roofs, boardwalks, and pool condition tell the maintenance story.
- Confirm the year built and any structural work for the specific unit; county records and third-party portals disagree on community dates.
- Register your criteria early: in a slow-turnover community, the watch list beats the portal.
The Sea Hammock buyers we see succeed decided on the community before a unit was available, did the document homework in advance, and moved within days when the right orientation listed. In a community where owners stay for decades, that preparation is the entire negotiation.
The ones we see lose paid ocean-row money for original condition, or skipped the reserve study because the deck sunrise was that good. The Atlantic does not read inspection reports. Somebody in the deal has to.
Sea Hammock vs. the Gated Oceanfront Set
The realistic cross-shop is the short list of gated oceanfront communities on this stretch of A1A:
| Community | Format | The honest one-liner |
|---|---|---|
| Serenata Beach | Resort-style gated oceanfront | Bigger amenity package, bigger community, different vibe. |
| Turtle Shores | Gated beach community to the south | The single-family-and-villa alternative on the preserve corridor. |
| Spinnakers Reach | Sawgrass Beach Club regime | Oceanfront behind the Beach Club gates, with optional club life. |
| Windemere | Elevator oceanfront, Beach Club | Single-level elevator living; the right-sizer's format. |
| Ocean Grande | Gated condos near Micklers | The near-Micklers alternative without direct frontage. |
Sea Hammock's lane: true gated ocean frontage with old-Florida character, a garage with every unit, no CDD, and the Guana preserve as the permanent western view. If cottage-scale oceanfront behind real gates is the search, the comparison ends here.
The Honest Pros and Cons
Pros
- One of very few gated oceanfront condo communities on the PV stretch of A1A
- Old-Florida cottage architecture on 24-plus acres of frontage
- One-car garage and storage with every unit
- No CDD; one association line to underwrite
- Guana preserve across the road: a view that cannot be built out
- Micklers Landing and Nocatee conveniences minutes away
Cons
- 1980s-era construction: renovation and reserve diligence required
- Low-key amenities; no gym, golf, or concierge
- Thin inventory; patience is mandatory
- Oceanfront insurance math
- Leasing rules favor longer terms; limited income flexibility
- Seven-figure entry even for preserve-side units
Our Sea Hammock Buyer Playbook
How we run a Sea Hammock purchase, in order:
- Decide the community first: Sea Hammock versus Serenata versus the Beach Club regimes is a character decision; settle it before a listing forces it.
- Do the document homework in advance: we keep current association intel so you can move in days, not weeks.
- Register the criteria: orientation, plan size, condition tolerance, and price ceiling, with the agents who work this community.
- Underwrite insurance and reserves before the offer, so the number you write is the number you mean.
- Negotiate on condition, not on hope: in a scarce community, the renovation delta is your leverage, use it precisely.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
Six answers we get in writing on every Sea Hammock contract:
- What is the current monthly fee, and what budget sits behind it?
- What do the reserve study and milestone inspection say, and what is funded versus planned?
- Are any special assessments pending or discussed in the last year of minutes?
- What are the leasing rules today, and have they changed recently?
- What does insurance quote for this unit, and what does the master policy cover?
- What did comparable orientations actually trade for, renovation-adjusted?
Is Sea Hammock Not For You?
The honest cut, both directions:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- New-construction finishes and warranties
- Resort amenities: gym, spa, golf, concierge
- Flexible short-term rental income
- Elevator-served single-level living
- Deep inventory to tour this weekend
- A sub-$1M oceanfront entry
Sea Hammock fits if you want
- Cottage-scale oceanfront behind real gates
- Old-Florida character instead of tower anonymity
- A garage and storage with your beach condo
- No CDD and one clean fee line
- A preserve view that can never change
- A residence community, not a rental machine
